Friday, November 20, 2015

COUNTING S H E E P in EDENIC

= Reverse -->

OVISKe(V)eSKaph-Bhet-Sin

KEV-esכבש[(K)-(V)-S]

ROOTS: Latin ovis is a sheep; the alleged Indo-European (IE) “root” is sheared
down to owi (sheep -- whence EWE, OVINE and OVIBOS). The Slavic sheep,
see below, demonstrates that a bilabial-fricative root is more correct, and with a dropped an initial- guttural.

כבש(K)e(V)eS is a lamb or sheep in Leviticus 4:32, while
earlier a lamb is כשבKeSeBH (Genesis
30:32,40). This is no accidental metathesis [EDK] or “scribal error.”

In the cattle business, Jacob wanted the KS(V), related to כסףKeSeF,
desire and money. On the altar, a sinner wants to כבשKa(V)aSH (conquer) his flaws, as ifכבסKa(V)a$ (cleansing – see “WASH”) in a כבשןKi(V)SHaN (furnace).

BRANCHES: To get
SHEEP, choose the כבשKeSeBH sheep, and swap the first two
letters. Now, with a mere bilabial shift of BH to P, the S-K-BH will echo Anglo-Saxon sceap (source of SHEEP).Yiddish often retains archaic elements from German. Sheep in Yiddish, scheps, may be keeping an end -s dropped
in Dutch schaap.

The initial S before the C, as usual, may be nonhistoric.
Norwegian sav(sheep) is from either KeSe(V) (lamb -
notice the resemblance to KEVES) or possibly שה SeH (lamb or kid). Finnishvasikka, calf is an M231
ofכבשKe(V)eS, the young of sheep. In Mapuche (isolate
of Chile)ufisa is sheep – also
preferring Ke(V)eS.Finnish lammas
(sheep) recalls the llama of South America.See "LAMB" – and see TOMENTUM at the “SUMAC” entry for a wooly source for lammas.Italianabbacchio is a lamb, with the S dropped
from KeBHes. Arabic souf
is a sheep's wool –
employing the Sin and Bhet of Ke(V)eS.

Another word for a sheep or lamb is כרKahR
(Deuteronomy32:14). B-Ydefines it as a male sheep, and in Ezekiel 4:2 it means a “battering
ram.” Gaelic “sheep” is caora.”
The Irish is caorach.

One again, the Slavic words are far closer to the Edenic
than to the IE reconstruction (without an S).

In the global sheepfold,are these words fromEdenic
כבשKe(V)eS
andשב KeSeBH,“sheep”

Akkadian

K a b s
u (male lamb)

כבשKeBHeS, sheep, lamb

Amharic

Bä g

ßכבשKe(V)eS

orבקרBaQaR, cattle

Anglo-Saxon

S c ea p(source of SHEEP)

M213
metathesis כשב KeSeBH

Belarusian

A v
ie č ak

guttural dropכבשKe(V)eS

Dutch

S ch aa p

M213
metathesis כשב KeSeBH

Farsi

G u sfand

כשב KeSeBH, S-G S-B

German

Sch af

M213
metathesis כשב KeSeBH

Georgian

ts’khvari

M312 Ke(V)eSorM213KeSeBH

Icelandic

S auð fé

guttural dropכשב KeSeBH orßכבשKe(V)eS

Latin

O v i s

guttural dropכבשKe(V)eS

Latin

P e c
u s(flock, herd animal,
sheep) -- see Amharic

M213
metathesis כבשKe(V)eS

orבקרBaQaR, cattle

Lithuanian

A
v i s

guttural dropכבשKe(V)eS

Maori

H i p i

fricativedropכבשKe(V)eS

Mapuche
(isolate of Chile)

U
f is a

guttural dropכבשKe(V)eS

Norwegian

S a v

guttural dropכשב KeSeBH

Old English

Ē o
w u

guttural andfricative drop

Polish; Bosnian, Croatian, Czech and
Serbian

O w c a;o v c a(and variations)

guttural dropכבשKe(V)eS

Russian, Ukranian

овецo v e
ts

guttural dropכבשKe(V)eS

Spanish

Oveja(sheep, ewe)

ßכבשKe(V)eS.fricative drop

Tajik

Gūsfand

כשב KeSeBH, S-G S-B

Uzbek

S o vl i q

ßכבשKe(V)eS. added liquid

Yiddish

S ch e p s

M213
metathesis כשב KeSeBH

.

It
looks bad for an Indo-European “root” owi(sheep).

It appears as though צאןTSOwN (sheep and goats, literally: small
cattle) is used for the “sheep” word in Albanian (dhen)*, Indonesian,
Khmer, Malay and Sundanese.*Tsadi and D interchange, and Albanian is
Indo-European.

Another word for a sheep or
lamb is כרKahR (Deuteronomy32:14). B-Y
defines it as a male sheep, and in Ezekiel 4:2 it means a “battering ram.” Gaelic
“sheep” is caora.” The Irish is caorach. Perhaps Telugu Gorrelu (sheep) and some Asian
guttural-vowel “sheep” words, like Thai Kæa, are related.